By Sarah Mitchell · Reviewed by Amanda Chen, Esq. · Last updated: January 2026

New York Homeschool Record Keeping Requirements (2026)

New York requires homeschool families to maintain records. Here's what to save, how to organize it, and how long to keep it.

Quick answer

New York homeschool families must keep records of attendance, subjects covered, and student work. The recommended cadence is monthly. Save records for the duration of compulsory attendance plus 5 years.

What records to keep in New York

How long to retain

For elementary and middle grades, keep records through the child's compulsory attendance window plus 5 years. For high school, keep transcripts and final portfolios permanently — colleges and employers may request them decades later. Digital backup (cloud-synced) is essential; paper copies alone are vulnerable to fire and water damage.

The simplest record-keeping system that actually works

The most successful New York families use a 3-part system: (1) a weekly digital log (a spreadsheet or an app like Homeschool Moment), (2) a per-child binder with monthly work samples, and (3) a single annual PDF portfolio exported at the end of each school year. Spending 10 minutes a week is far easier than scrambling to reconstruct a year of records during evaluation season.

New York-specific notes

Submit IHIP, four quarterly reports, and an annual assessment to your district.

New York requires testing in alternating years grades 4–8; annually grades 9–12, so keep all score reports indefinitely.

Frequently asked questions

Does New York ever audit homeschool records?

New York can request records as part of an evaluation or in response to a complaint. Audits without cause are rare, but record requests during an evaluation are routine.

Are digital records acceptable in New York?

Yes — digital logs, photos of student work, and exported PDF portfolios are all acceptable. Keep a backup in cloud storage and a printed copy of the year-end portfolio.

What happens if I lose my New York homeschool records?

Reconstruct what you can from photos, calendars, and curriculum receipts. For high school, college admissions offices have processes for handling lost transcripts — but it's a painful process. Back up religiously.

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